The rehearsals -- one almost every other day since December -- take
place at the Brooklyn Boys and Girls public high school in Bedford-Stuyvesant, a
historically African-American section of New York. The Brooklyn "Steppers"
marching band includes brass, woodwind, and percussion players. There's also a
flag-twirling component, and a troupe of dancers, who lead off the band's
marches. Members range from eight to 19 years old, and attend schools all over
Brooklyn.
Bandleader Tyrone Brown said that being chosen to perform in
the Inaugural Parade is a great honor, but not a great surprise. "What we know
is that our music is strong, that our package was strong, our stories are
strong, we are a strong program,” he said. “We are New York's premier marching
band, so if they're going to find a marching band from New York, it has to be
us. So, it's exciting, you know, we had some doubts, but not many. We got a
phone call on a Saturday morning that told us we were in."
The band has often traveled around the country
to play. This Martin Luther King Day, they will be performing at New York's
Madison Square Garden for Martin Luther King's birthday celebration. But members
say nothing will compare to the day after, when they will be in the first
division leading the Inaugural Parade for Barack Obama.
Twelve-year-old
Samantha Umpthery plays the cymbals. "I feel it's an honor to play for the first
black President of the United States,” she said, adding, “And also I prayed that
everybody will stand up for him that God will watch over him." Tanet Fleming, 9,
who plays the tenor drum, said she has become a celebrity at school. "I'm going
to be excited because my classmates are asking me autographs from him and stuff,
like pictures,” she said. Tubaist Timmy Okotieuro, 16, said, “This is epic, to
be able to be a part of it, to say to my children and for them to tell their
children, yeah, I had a relative who performed at the inauguration of the first
African-American president.”
Band leader Tyrone Brown says that in their march down
Pennsylvania Avenue, the Brooklyn "Steppers" will play about half a dozen songs.
They will include a Bill Withers song, “Lovely Day,” and the Stevie Wonder tune
that was a theme of Mr. Obama's campaign: "Signed, Sealed, Delivered [I'm
Yours]."
The Brooklyn "Steppers" follow a
traditional African-American "high-step" style of marching, he says, that is
more dance-like than military. "This band comes from a history of black college
marching bands up and down the south, where marching high, and the high leg-lift
is a tradition,” Brown said. “And we just kind of adopted that tradition and
brought it to New York."
Band
parents like Sharon Joseph are just as excited as their children, if not more
so. "I'm not quite sure if they really recognize the great opportunity this is.
Of all the marching bands around, to be chosen out of Brooklyn to come and
participate in this history-making event, I'm not quite sure if they've gotten
it yet."
Tuesday's
Inaugural Parade will have a line-up of more than 80 bands, chosen from more
than 1400 applicants around the country. Among the first to march down
Pennsylvania Avenue will be the Brooklyn "Steppers" Marching Band, made up of
young people from New York City. In the weeks since they learned they'd been
chosen, the Brooklyn school children and teens have been rehearsing in every
free moment, and with their parents, raising money for their trip to Washington.